WEBVTT - What If Cockroaches Went Extinct?

0:00:02.040 --> 0:00:07.080
<v Speaker 1>Welcome to brain Stuff from How Stuff Works. Hi, brain Stuff,

0:00:07.120 --> 0:00:11.080
<v Speaker 1>Lauren vocal bomb here. What if there were no cockroaches?

0:00:11.600 --> 0:00:14.120
<v Speaker 1>The question sounds like it's straight out of the marketing

0:00:14.120 --> 0:00:18.920
<v Speaker 1>materials from Paradise. Cockroaches spread bacteria like salmonella, they leave

0:00:19.000 --> 0:00:22.400
<v Speaker 1>droppings behind everywhere they walk, and they can exacerbate allergies

0:00:22.400 --> 0:00:25.760
<v Speaker 1>and asthma. All are good reasons to squash them all,

0:00:26.400 --> 0:00:29.440
<v Speaker 1>but not so fast. Only a few species of roaches

0:00:29.520 --> 0:00:32.280
<v Speaker 1>out of an estimated five to ten thousand, are commonly

0:00:32.320 --> 0:00:36.839
<v Speaker 1>found infesting homes. Most cockroaches live in warm, tropical climates,

0:00:37.000 --> 0:00:40.400
<v Speaker 1>happily minding their own business and staying out of humans business.

0:00:41.040 --> 0:00:44.520
<v Speaker 1>Some are even beautiful, no really, and glow in the dark.

0:00:45.200 --> 0:00:47.640
<v Speaker 1>But if you are still determined to play this game out,

0:00:47.800 --> 0:00:49.600
<v Speaker 1>then would better take a look at what would happen

0:00:49.640 --> 0:00:53.760
<v Speaker 1>if they all disappeared? Long story short, it's not good.

0:00:54.600 --> 0:00:58.000
<v Speaker 1>In tropical forests. Cockroaches feed on decaying wood and leaves,

0:00:58.400 --> 0:01:00.960
<v Speaker 1>and all those droppings they leave the hind well. They're

0:01:01.040 --> 0:01:04.679
<v Speaker 1>filled with organic debris and nutrients, including nitrogen, which are

0:01:04.680 --> 0:01:07.880
<v Speaker 1>added back into the soil. Nitrogen is essential to the

0:01:07.880 --> 0:01:10.520
<v Speaker 1>growth of trees, which are essential to forests and our

0:01:10.520 --> 0:01:13.320
<v Speaker 1>own lives, since we use wood products to shelter both

0:01:13.319 --> 0:01:17.560
<v Speaker 1>ourselves and the animals that we do actually like. Oh

0:01:17.640 --> 0:01:21.160
<v Speaker 1>and speaking of those animals that we like, especially small mammals, birds,

0:01:21.160 --> 0:01:25.000
<v Speaker 1>and reptiles, they feed on cockroaches. And since other animals

0:01:25.040 --> 0:01:28.360
<v Speaker 1>feed on these small mammals and reptiles, disrupting even this

0:01:28.440 --> 0:01:31.120
<v Speaker 1>one small skittering link in the food chain could have

0:01:31.200 --> 0:01:34.319
<v Speaker 1>a widespread effect on the world around us. So the

0:01:34.360 --> 0:01:36.800
<v Speaker 1>next time you're tempted to smash a cockroach before it

0:01:36.840 --> 0:01:39.760
<v Speaker 1>runs under your fridge, consider that it may be helping

0:01:39.840 --> 0:01:42.560
<v Speaker 1>to refuel a local forest when it isn't hanging around

0:01:42.560 --> 0:01:45.920
<v Speaker 1>your house. Or I mean, go ahead, but don't wish

0:01:45.959 --> 0:01:49.280
<v Speaker 1>death on the whole lot of them worldwide. Don't worry, though,

0:01:49.560 --> 0:01:52.480
<v Speaker 1>they are in no risk of going extinct anytime soon.

0:01:53.000 --> 0:01:56.800
<v Speaker 1>Cockroaches have been around since before the dinosaurs. Cockroach fossils

0:01:56.800 --> 0:01:59.520
<v Speaker 1>show that they've been around for at least three hundred

0:01:59.600 --> 0:02:03.640
<v Speaker 1>million years. That's some serious staying power. They really are

0:02:03.720 --> 0:02:07.320
<v Speaker 1>some of the hardiest creatures around, capable of withstanding radiation

0:02:07.360 --> 0:02:09.840
<v Speaker 1>and huge doses far more than a human could handle,

0:02:10.160 --> 0:02:12.600
<v Speaker 1>and going without food for up to a month. So

0:02:12.760 --> 0:02:15.720
<v Speaker 1>If you do squash one scurrying across your floor, you're

0:02:15.760 --> 0:02:19.400
<v Speaker 1>in no danger of having doomed these resourceful bugs to extinction.

0:02:24.680 --> 0:02:27.640
<v Speaker 1>Today's episode was written by Karen Kirkpatrick and produced by

0:02:27.680 --> 0:02:30.480
<v Speaker 1>Tyler Clang and Tristan McNeil. For more on this and

0:02:30.639 --> 0:02:33.360
<v Speaker 1>lots of other creepy Crawley topics, visit our home planet,

0:02:33.520 --> 0:02:46.359
<v Speaker 1>how Stuff works dot com